Reason...
McDonald’s
to Kids: Apple Slices For
All, Whether or Not You Want Them
McDonald’s nudges kids to eat more
fruit, fewer fries after being given a good shove by regulators
By Katherine Mangu-Ward
July
26, 2011
Every
Happy Meal shall henceforth
contain apple slices, according to a decree from McDonald’s HQ today,
which
boasts that the change is part of “a comprehensive plan [that] aims to
help
customers—especially families and children—make nutrition-minded
choices whether
visiting McDonald’s or eating elsewhere.”
And
while USA Today reports that the
company is claiming the apple incursion is “absolutely not” a response
to
growing regulatory threats from local, state, and federal governments,
the
Associated Press is reporting that First Lady Michelle Obama is
pleased. The
redesigned meals also happen to come within striking distance of the
standards
crafted by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, initially designed
to make
existing Happy Meals illegal within the borders of the City by the Bay.
Apples
have been on offer since 2004,
of course. But no longer will American parents be forced to choose
between a
Happy Meal that includes McDonald’s signature salty, delicious fries or
one
that replaces those fries with fruit. In a move that can only be
described as
Solomonic, McDonald’s has decided that Happy Meals will include both—a
wee
serving of deep fried spuds (1.1 ounces, down from the current 2.4) and
a
baggie of pre-sliced apples (sans the creepy caramel dipping sauce now
on
offer). Happy Meals will also default to include low-fat milk rather
than soda.
When
customers were offered the
choice, only 11 percent opted for apples over fries for their kids,
despite the
fact that 88 percent were aware of the healthier alternative. All
things being
equal, McDonald’s might have interpreted the slow uptake on the apple
option as
evidence that people don’t come to the Golden Arches when they want to
eat
healthy (or even faux-healthy) and sent the fruit the way of the McRib.
But
all things are not equal. Hysteria
about childhood obesity continues to mount, along with an ever growing
impulse
by regulators to blame commerical food providers for the problem. So
governments (and activists who have legislators’ ears) nudge McDonald’s
to
include healthier options. That accomplished, the nudgers set out to
convert
those options into defaults. It’s not hard to see demands to remove the
fry
option altogether are close on the heels of this concession. And always
the
threat of binding legal requirements lurk in the background.
But
when the company itself protests
that it is making changes in kids’ meals purely in response to customer
demand
to enjoy “more food groups” and have their fast food chain of choice
“create
nutritional awareness,” it’s hard to tell where coercion begins and
voluntary
change ends. McDonald’s is one of those brands, like Wal-Mart, that
gets
consistently hammered for being the biggest, baddest guy out there,
even as the
chain scrambles to stay ahead of the game, become the good guy, or at
least be
left alone.
And
whenever a health or safety
measure is instituted “for the children,” you can bet that an
adult-sized
version is lurking nearby. And lo and behold, amidst the crowing about
apples
for kiddies this tidbit has mostly been ignored: McDonald’s will be
reducing
sodium in its meals across the board by 15 percent in the next four
years. The
chain has also hired a third-party firm to report on promised
additional
progress to reduce sugars, fat, and calories by 2020.
The
food scientists/powerful wizards
working around the clock at McDonald’s HQ will certainly do their best
to
minimize the impact of these promises on the taste of McDonald’s food.
But
today’s announcements are a perfect example of how moves to protect
kids wind
up taking choices away from adults (in this case, based on science that
is
shaky at best).
McDonald’s
changes are voluntary, but
they happened because McDonald’s exists in a world where trans fat bans
are a
reality, and junk food taxes are fodder for The New York Times op-ed
page.
Regulating food intended for kids is an easier sell, but the state is
really
just taking away parents’ choices. And once adults are no longer free
to choose
for their kids, why let them go on choosing for themselves?
For
now, McDonald’s still serves (a
few) fries to kids, and the kids are free to toss the apples. Parents
can even
still cobble together an old-style Happy Meal for Junior, if they are
so
inclined, subbing out soda for milk and nixing the apples. And Dad can
add
extra salt to his fries. The iron fist of the state may not be writing
McDonald’s menu, but neither is the invisible hand.
Read
it with links at Reason
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